Timothy Brown's FootballArchaeology.com has a daily football factoid that he shares that are interesting in a short read. They uniquely preserve football history and we are quite happy that Tim has agreed to join us each week to go over some of his Today's Tidbits. Click that link and you can subscribe for free to receive them.
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FootballArchaeology.com Six Players to Watch from 1954
Comparing preseason predictions to the end-of-season outcomes is always fun. It can also be educational when looking back in time, such as the 1954 season since most of us have little awareness of a season played almost seventy years ago. So, here’s a page from a promotional booklet with background information and the schedules for about 200 college teams. The booklet’s writers looked at the 1952 and 1953 seasons to identify — www.footballarchaeology.com
The preservation of football history and rekindling memories of some bygone star of the gridiron is a passion for many of us. There are few greater research satisfactions than finding a long-forgotten story of a player one knows little about.
Timothy P. Brown looks back at how six promising athletes mentioned in a pre-season article actually did. The players are Don King of the Clemson Tigers, Frank Brooks of Georgia Tech, Joe Mastrogiovanni, a Wyoming quarterback, Kurt Burris, a linebacker of the Oklahoma Sooners, Notre Dame Fighting Irish quarterback Ralph Guglielmi, and Pat Eubel, an Army Black Knight runningback.
Presaerving the history of great players has never been so much fun!
The 1903 Columbia-Penn Checkerboard
One of these days, I will put together a list of my ten favorite football images. This shot of the 1903 Pennsylvania-Columbia game at the Polo Grounds will be among them because it communicates so much about football at the time. Played at the third version of the Polo Grounds, 10,000 people attended the game, with most arriving via the subway cars seen just beyond the stands on the far side of the field. Another several hundred people watch the game from Coogan’s Bluff. They are at the top of — www.footballarchaeology.com
Timothy P Brown takes us back in time once again, this time to the 1903 season and the Polo Grounds checkerboard football field in October for the Penn - Columbia game. Tim shares some great photos of the field with some informative insights. An excellent piece of football field history.
John Heisman and Michigan's 100o wins
What would you think of a first-year coach who opened the season by beating Ohio State 40-0, trouncing them a second time 50-0, and ending the season with a 24-22 victory over Michigan? Those three wins define John Heisman’s first season coaching at Oberlin. He also picked up two victories against Adelbert College, a predecessor to Case Western Reserve, and wins over Ohio Wesleyan and Kenyon. That 7-0 season came in 1892, immediately after Heisman left the University of Pennsylvania with a law — www.footballarchaeology.com
John Heisman played three fruitful seasons at the University of Pennsylvania and then went on to a legendary coaching career; his first stop was at Oberlin College, where he beat a few teams no one dreamed his team could.
When Passing Into The End Zone Became Legal
We take for granted back-shoulder passes into the front corner and fade routes in the back corner of the end zone, yet both exist today due to a long line of changes to football’s rules, strategies, and techniques. Neither was legal in football’s early passing days, so let’s look at why that was so and the changes that gave us such exciting plays. — www.footballarchaeology.com
Throwing a football to a receiver in the endzone was not always a touchdown according to the rules of football. At one point it was something very undesirable for an offense. Timothy P Brown the Archaeologist of Football history digs into this subject.
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Podcast:Football Archaeology, John Heisman, Oberlin College, Penn Quakers, Timothy P Brown, endzoneOrville Mulligan: Sports Writer
We invite you to take a ride through 1920's sports history in the audio drama that takes the listener through the sounds and legendary events of the era through the eyes of a young newspaper journalist. You will feel like you were there!
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If you like remembering players of the NFL by their numbers then you may also enjoy going uniform number by number in other team sports as well. We have it for you on our other website in baseball, basketball, hockey and more on the Sports Jersey Dispatch.
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Gridiron Legacy: Pro Football's Missing Origin Story
Author Gregg Ficery tells the story of the beginnings of Pro Football through the pro football career of his Great Grandfather, Bob Shiring
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Bears versus Cardinals: The NFL's Oldest Rivalry
Author Joe Ziemba the master historian of football in Chicago has released another beauty. It is titled Bears versus Cardinals: The NFL's Oldest Rivalry.
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